In 1993, the song was
covered by American singer, songwriter, and actress
Taylor Dayne as "'''Can't Get Enough of Your Love'''". When Dayne submitted her planned third album to
Arista Records, label president
Clive Davis strongly suggested that she remake the Barry White classic to serve as the album's lead single (replacing Dayne's choice, the self-penned "I'll Wait" which was the planned title cut; the album's title was amended to
Soul Dancing). Produced by
David Cole and
Robert Clivillés of
C+C Music Factory, Dayne's "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" became a US dance club hit, peaking at number two on the
Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart. However, the track evinced a sharp drop in Dayne's profile on the
Billboard Hot 100 with a number 20 peak; Dayne's first seven singles had all reached the top 10 but her eighth single, "
Heart of Stone", peaked at number 12. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" was her final top 40 hit with the follow-up single, "
Send Me a Lover", being her last Hot 100 entry. The song also reached number 14 on the US
Cash Box Top 100. The track had more impact for Dayne internationally. In Australia, it spent three weeks at number two in August 1993 and was the 19th-best-selling single of 1993, receiving a Platinum certification for sales of at least 70,000 copies. The song also reached number eight in Canada, where it was the 67th-best-selling single of the year. Elsewhere, the song reached the top 20 in Belgium, Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
Critical reception Jose F. Promis from
AllMusic complimented Dayne's cover version as "excellent" and "dance-lite".
Larry Flick from
Billboard magazine wrote, "Long-absent pop dynamo takes a page from
Barry White's book of
R&B/
disco classics, and gives it a faithful reading. Her boisterous delivery occasionally overpowers the instrumentation, though she is ultimately quite effective in conjuring up feelings of nostalgia." Dave Obee from
Calgary Herald remarked that "she even makes a Barry White song sound masculine." Troy J. Augusto from
Cash Box described it as a "bouncy cut that recalls, of all things, '70s disco but does so with enough of the singer's powerful presence to cancel the questionable musical vibe." He added that the song's approach "is lighter than writer Barry White's original, orchestrated version but strong delivery from Dayne makes up for lack of depth otherwise apparent in this read of tune." An uncredited review from Pan-European magazine
Music & Media reviewed it favorably saying, Long time no see, but now she rolls out of the C&C Factory for a pop/dance rendition of the Barry White classic. You can't get more sensual than this." Nick Krewen from
The Hamilton Spectator said her remake "is strong enough to claim ownership". Connie Johnson from the
Los Angeles Times felt that here, Dayne "does her one better, with a campy, deluxe version" of White's song. In his weekly UK chart commentary,
James Masterton wrote, that "summery soul being the order of the day and may well give her her first
Top 20 hit for 5 years."
James Hamilton from
Music Week's
RM Dance Update viewed it as "soulful". Mike Joyce from
The Washington Post found that Dayne's update of the disco classic "proves disarming."
Music video A music video was produced to promote the single, directed by Randee St. Nicholas, featuring Dayne performing in the middle of a dancing crowd of people. The video was later made available on Dayne's official
YouTube channel in 2009, and had generated almost six million views as of early 2024.
Track listing • "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" (album version) – 4:25 • "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" (C+C extended club
mix I) – 6:05 • "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" (C+C extended club mix II) – 6:46 • "Can't Get Enough of Your Love" (C+C special edition mix) – 6:12 • "Let's Spend the Night Together" – 5:35
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications Release history ==Other versions==